I
heard it before I saw it.
The
humming came from beyond the woods. The sound was lower than the whine of the
13-year cicadas that came out last year. It wasn’t the train––that came from
the opposite direction. The noise was coming closer and closer, and I was out
here alone.
My
forehead throbbed where Lotus had kicked me five summers ago. From my perch on
a low chinaberry limb, I rubbed the scar and wondered what I’d do if I had to
escape.
Should
I stay put and hope for the best or run across the yard to the cellar? Trouble
was, a big piece of lava rock from Mama’s lily garden anchored the sloping,
tin-covered door. Even if I pushed the stone off, could I lift the bulky
hatch?
Spiders
and rats and snakes might waylay me. And bats. We’d had bats scootch under the
inside door and fly around in the house.
Could
my legs carry me to the far end of the front porch? What if I tripped over the sandbox?
Or stepped on a piece of glass?
Would
anything be scary enough to make me climb over the well curb and hang inside by
my hands? I shuddered at the thought of falling in. Frogs had, and they’d died.
We could taste them in the drinking water like we tasted bitterweeds in Bossy’s
milk.
No,
I’d climb higher into the leafy branches. Maybe I could hide myself into
safety. But what if I got so scared my arms turned to jelly?
The
roar grew deafening. Whatever it was rattled and clunked worse than the old
Number Nine climbing the grade to Black Mountain. Birdie stood beneath the
chinaberry and barked. I shook like the lacy leaves sheltering me. Birdie’s
bark became a howl. The earth vibrated. I squinched my eyes tight and hung on,
digging my throbbing head into the rough bark. “Dear Lord,” I prayed.
If
I lived to tell about this, I’d better see what hit me. I took a deep breath
and opened my eyes a mite. Looking up through a gap in the branches, I saw
bright red letters on the gray belly of an airplane not far from my head. SANK
WEAVER’S JOY RIDES, it read. The plane touched ground nearby in Daddy’s
hayfield.
Breathing
a sigh, I relaxed my hold. My heart pounded like it did after I’d chased Birdie
to the lower forty and back. Uncle Sank and his practical jokes. Daddy’s kid
brother’d learned to fly planes in the First War. When he came home, he
traveled to Fort Smith and gave thrill rides to folks willing to risk the
latest invention of air travel.
Birdie
and I lit out to the hayfield. We’d give him to know he scared us out of three
year’s growth.
And
for that, he’d have to take us up in his airplane.